Disabled people as counterfeit citizens: the politics of resentment past and present |
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Authors: | Bill Hughes |
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Affiliation: | Department of Social Sciences, Media and Journalism, Glasgow School for Business and Society, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK |
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Abstract: | In this article I argue that disabled people in the United Kingdom have been tipped into an abyss of counterfeit citizenship. They have been smeared as ‘false mendicants’ – an old trick well documented in the historical archives of ableism. Neoliberalism has used this repertoire of invalidation – its noxious taint of cunning and fraud – as the ‘moral justification’ for welfare reform and for the pillory and notoriety into which the entire disabled community has been placed. Austerity – through the neoliberal politics of resentment – has made disabled people its scapegoat. I argue that a historical precedent for the contemporary demonisation of disabled people as counterfeit citizens can be found in the early modern period in the mythology of the ‘sturdy beggar’. |
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Keywords: | neoliberalism welfare cuts resentment sturdy beggars |
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